The Long Honduran Night: Resistance, Terror, and the United States in the Aftermath of the Coup

Dana Frank

Paperback

Regular price $21.95
Regular price Sale price $21.95
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Items available in store will have a number before "in stock"

Regular price $21.95
Regular price Sale price $21.95

A story of resistance, repression, and US policy in Honduras in the aftermath of a violent military coup.



Publisher: Haymarket Books
Published: 11/27/2018
Pages: 344
Weight: 0.95lbs
Size: 8.40h x 5.50w x 0.90d
ISBN: 9781608469604


Review Citation(s):
Kirkus Reviews 10/15/2018
Foreword 10/26/2018

About the Author

Dana Frank is Professor of History Emerita at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She is the author of Bananeras: Women Transforming the Banana Unions of Latin America (2005; repr. Haymarket 2016); Buy American: The Untold Story of Economic Nationalism (Beacon, 1999); Purchasing Power: Consumer Organizing, Gender, and the Seattle Labor Movement, 1919-1929 (Cambridge, 1994); Local Girl Makes History: Exploring Northern California's Kitsch Monuments (City Lights, 2007); and, with Howard Zinn and Robin D. G. Kelley, Three Strikes: Miners, Musicians, Salesgirls and the Fighting Spirit of Labor's Last Century (Beacon, 2001). Her contribution to Three Strikes has been reprinted, with a new introduction, by Haymarket Books as Women Strikers Occupy Chain Store, Win Big (2012). Since the 2009 military coup her articles about human rights and U.S. policy in Honduras have appeared in The Nation, New York Times, Politico Magazine, Foreign Affairs.com, Foreign Policy.com, Miami Herald, Los Angeles Times, The Baffler, and many other publications, and she has testified before both the U.S. Congress and Canadian Parliament.